Towards more sustainable and inclusive development corridors in Africa

Diego Juffe Bignoli*, Neil Burgess, Amayaa Wijesinghe, Jessica Thorn, Molly Brown, Katherine Gannon, Catherine Sang, Gediminas Lesutis, Paulus Lyimo, Nyemo Chilagane, Christine Tam, Pantaleo Munishi, Japhet Kashaigili, Christopher Sandbrook, Daniel Olago, Robert Marchant, Lucy Wariungi, Han Meng, Declan Conway , Tanya PayneArnout van Soesbergen, Yinlong Xu, Julia Wentworth, Aisha Niazi, , Ayesha Hargey, Hamza Butt, Foglietti Camilla Blasi , Rowan Palmer, Joseph Bull, Lisen Runsten

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Development corridors are linear programmes of infrastructure and agriculture aiming to facilitate rapid socio-economic development. In Africa, they are a major development activity, with 88 underway or planned corridors. Drawing from extensive literature and insights gleaned from a 4-year research programme, this review scrutinizes the impacts of development corridors on people, wildlife and ecosystems in Kenya and Tanzania, proposing solutions to achieve better outcomes. The overarching goal was to discern the principle challenges emerging from the practical execution of the prevailing corridor model. The holistic approach taken, assessing the development corridors paradigm through an integrated ecological, social, and economic lens, provides novel insights that have not been possible using more traditional – siloed – research approaches. Eight key challenge areas are identified: impact assessments processes; coherence across international, national and local planning; governance; inclusivity; equality; impacts on biodiversity and ecosystem services; incorporation of future climate risks; and integrated water resource management. Poorly planned and implemented corridors detrimentally impact livelihoods and ecosystems. They lack a sustainable development vision, detailed social, environmental or climate risk assessments, and develop incrementally in policy and corporate spaces. There is also often a disconnect between investors and recipient governments, with some investors funding what governments request without applying internationally-recognised safeguards, and governments lacking capacity and resources to enforce regulations. We make recommendations for addressing these challenge areas. These aim to enhance impact assessment efficacy; integrate local perspectives into effective and inclusive corridor planning; overcome siloed project development and implementation; anticipate future development projections; and prioritise landscape preservation for enhanced ecosystem services and climate resilience.
Original languageEnglish
Article number035012
Number of pages17
JournalEnvironmental Research: Infrastructure and Sustainability
Volume4
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 17 Sept 2024

Keywords

  • Sustainable
  • Inclusive
  • Development
  • Corridors
  • Africa

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Towards more sustainable and inclusive development corridors in Africa'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this